Thursday, 2 June 2011
Matt's Big Oscar Challenge Day 135-136: Mostly Marlon
So after my Elizabeth Taylor retrospective we have four films from
Marlon Brando an actor who was considered to have changed the way actors
were perceived on films. Once upon a time you had the classic 'film
star' such as Fred Astaire, Mickey Rooney or Cary Grant but then Brando
was a new breed of actor who really got into the character and developed
the phrase method acting. Here is part one of two blogs looking at the four Brando films nominated for the Best Picture prize.
We
finished the last instalment of the Oscar blog with a Tennessee
Williams adaptation and we start our Marlon Brando retrospective with
another Williams story - A Streetcar Named Desire. For those of you
unaware with the story it sees the demure but emotionally fragile
Blanche Dubouis journey to New Orleans to stay with her sister Stella
and Stella's husband the brutish Stanley played by Brando. As time goes
on Brando continues to resent Blanche's domination of Stella's time and
her relationship with his friend Mitch so he starts to dig dirt on why
she had to leave her old home. The final confrontation with ends in
Stanley raping Blanche before she is carted off to a mental institution is
very well done by director Elia Kazan by taking the camera around the
expressions of all the characters and using the strong score to play the
emotions of the two sisters with Stella finally seeing the light and
leaving her husband with their new baby. As someone who read the play as
part of my English literature A-Level I have to say that everybody
involved did their best to recreate what this story should be. The set
direction was rightfully given an Oscar for providing the claustrophobic
atmosphere of both Stanley and Stella's apartment to the small area in
which the characters inhabit. Vivien Leigh had previously played Blanche
on the stage in London and bought both star power and incredible timing
as a character who slowly loses her mind throughout the film. Kim
Hunter is great as the tortured Stella while Karl Malden also stole the
show in his couple of scenes as the hapless Mitch who wants to tame
Blanche but realises that is impossible. Leigh, Malden and Hunter all
won Oscars for their performances indeed the only person who didn't win
an acting Oscar was Marlon Brando. However Brando won something else a
new found fame for his great turn as Stanley he plays a man who was
raised to behave a certain way and is almost tortured every time he
hurts Stella and she leaves him briefly. He is brutish but at the same
time doesn't go over-the-top and most importantly he becomes the
character this isn't Marlon Brando as Stanley this is Stanley and you
can really believe it. One more thing about the film is Alex North's
great score who went against type composing short pieces of music to
reflect the trauma of the characters but unfortunately he didn't win the
Oscar but he did set a precedent in terms of film music as maybe Brando
did with character development.
After
his Oscar nomination for Streetcar, Brando was nominated for Viva
Zapata at the next Oscar ceremony and then again at the Oscar ceremony
held in 1954. However nobody quite expected that role to be in an
adaptation of William Shakespeare's Julius Caesar. The film saw a lot of
Shakespeare pros take the parts that they'd already taken on stage for
example British theatrical legend John Gielgud played Cassius and James
Mason who also had Shakespearian experience was Brutus here. Even
producer John Houseman had Caesar experience having been involved in the
classic Orson Welles Mercury Theatre production but by this time Welles
and Houseman had fallen out and Welles wanted nothing to do with this
production. However Brando's casting as Marc Anthony was met with
scepticism to the point of Paul Scofield being on standby if Brando's
screen test bombed however Brando was so good that Gielgud offered him
the lead in the production of Hamlet he was directing, Brando turned
this offer down. I'm really not going to retype the plot of Caesar as we
all know the first half sees many of his followers conspire his demise
and the second half sees Anthony's rise. While we're on Anthony Brando
was brilliant even though he had very little to do in the first half of
the film from the 'Friends, Romans, Countrymen' speech onwards he
captures the imagination being able to deliver Shakespeare's lines with
all the precision of a pro and the doubts that the 'mumbler' wouldn't be
able to perform were cast aside here. I'm not sure if it was good
enough to be Oscar nominated but maybe the Academy were so surprised by
Brando's performance that he got the nod just for doing something
different. Aside from Brando the ensemble cast are all terrific
especially Mason's Brutus and Louis Calhern's Caesar. I also have to
applaud the set design for giving us something grandiose and recreating
ancient Rome brilliantly and also for handling the crowd scenes very
well.
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